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Our guest today is Sarah Wise, an author known for her incisive social studies of nineteenth century history. In this episode Wise takes us back to a more recent year, 1947, so she can investigate the moment when the British public began to turn against the Mental Deficiency Act of 1913.
The Mental Deficiency Act was a terrifying piece of legislation that resulted in the imprisonment of tens of thousands of vulnerable people. As Wise explains, many of its victims were young, working class women who were deemed incurable 'moral imbeciles'. As such they were locked away with no hope of release. In 1947 this began to change.
Sarah Wise is the author The Undesirables: The Law that Locked Away a Generation.
Scene One: George Scott Rimmington's bungalow in Newton Abbot (September 1947)
Scene Two: Publication of The News of the World's expose of Margery X (1947)
Scene Three: Cambridgeshire MP stands up in the Commons and asks Aneurin "Nye" Bevan a question (30 January 1947)
Memento: A pencil written letter from 'Christine' to her mother.
Presenter: Peter Moore
Guest: Sarah Wise
Production: Maria Nolan
Theme music: Firelight by Minka
By Travels Through Time4.6
7676 ratings
Our guest today is Sarah Wise, an author known for her incisive social studies of nineteenth century history. In this episode Wise takes us back to a more recent year, 1947, so she can investigate the moment when the British public began to turn against the Mental Deficiency Act of 1913.
The Mental Deficiency Act was a terrifying piece of legislation that resulted in the imprisonment of tens of thousands of vulnerable people. As Wise explains, many of its victims were young, working class women who were deemed incurable 'moral imbeciles'. As such they were locked away with no hope of release. In 1947 this began to change.
Sarah Wise is the author The Undesirables: The Law that Locked Away a Generation.
Scene One: George Scott Rimmington's bungalow in Newton Abbot (September 1947)
Scene Two: Publication of The News of the World's expose of Margery X (1947)
Scene Three: Cambridgeshire MP stands up in the Commons and asks Aneurin "Nye" Bevan a question (30 January 1947)
Memento: A pencil written letter from 'Christine' to her mother.
Presenter: Peter Moore
Guest: Sarah Wise
Production: Maria Nolan
Theme music: Firelight by Minka

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